• January – the
Chaine Memorial at
Larne is completed. • March – the
Pan-Celtic Society is founded by
W. B. Yeats. • April –
Pope Leo XIII issues a decree denouncing the "
Plan of Campaign" as the
Holy Office issues a rescript to the
Bishops of the
Catholic Church in Ireland to boycott the Campaign. This is ignored by many. • 4 June–27 October – Irish Exhibition at
Olympia (London). • 20 August – the
Christian Brothers College is founded in
Cork. • September •
James Joyce enters the
Clongowes Wood College as the school's youngest student. •
(approx. date) James Connolly deserts from his British Army regiment in Dublin and moves to
Dundee. • Irish members of the
British House of Commons attempt to introduce an Irish Local Government Bill; however the Bill is opposed by Chief Secretary
Arthur Balfour. •
Belfast is awarded
city status by
Queen Victoria. • The
Belfast Central Library is founded. • A large flock of 110
Pallas's sandgrouse, a rare species of birds in Ireland, is recorded, one of the last known migrations witnessed in Ireland. •
W. B. Yeats joins the Esoteric Section of the
Theosophical Society. •
James Daly sells the
Connaught Telegraph to employee T. H. Gillespie. • Thomas Lindsay Buick becomes Secretary of the Gladstone branch of the
Irish National League. • Reverend
Henry Lett publishes a research paper on several unknown forms of
fungi found in
Ulster; however this document, as well as other research by Lett, is later lost. •
Letitia Alice Walkington became the first woman in the United Kingdom to receive a degree of
Bachelor of Laws, from the
Royal University of Ireland at
Queen's College, Belfast. ==Arts and literature==